Biography

Annie Goldson has been producing and directing award-winning documentaries and docudramas for 20 years in the United States and New Zealand. Her work is known for its craft, sensitivity and engagement.

Her films have won over 50 awards at international film festivals, opened theatrically world wide and have been broadcast on prestigious channels including HBO-Cinemax, ABC-Aust, ARD (Germany), Channel 4 (UK), POV (PBS), CBC, SBS, Canalplus, TVNZ, TV3, Maori Television and many more. Her best-known titles are Punitive Damage, Georgie Girl, Sheilas: 28 Years On, Pacific Solution: From Afghanistan to Aotearoa, Elgar's Engima, An Island Calling, Brother Number One, and He Toki Huna. In 2017, she completed a new documentary KIM DOTCOM: Caught in the Web which is premiering at SXSW in Austin, Texas. Annie has also overseen the production of an associated web project: www.kimdotcom.film.

Annie is also a writer and has published articles in books and journals such as The Listener (NZ), Landfall, Screen, Semiotext(e), Social Text, Studies in International Documentary and others. Her book Landscape, Memory, Dad and Me was published by Victoria University Publications. She has been director of the biennial New Zealand International Documentary Conference (Expanding Documentary); a trustee of the New Zealand International Documentary Festival, Documentary Edge and the Africa New Zealand Film Festival; and was President of the Screen Directors’ Guild of New Zealand.

Receiving her PhD in Film and Television Studies from The University of Auckland in 2005, Annie is a Professor in the disciplinary area of Media and Communication teaching across the production and theory divide. She was Head of Discipline in the years 2014-2016 and currently serves as PhD Advisor, heading the Graduate Studies Committee and is the VC appointee on the Professorial Promotions Committee. In 2006 she was awarded an Officer of the New Zealand Order of Merit for Services to Film and was appointed a Fellow of the Royal Society of New Zealand in 2017. Annie also received a Research Excellence Medal from the University of Auckland for her film Brother Number One, one of two recipients in the Faculty of Arts and was awarded a Research Excellence Medal from the Faculty of Arts itself.

Research | Current

Documentary film directing, producing and editing

Documentary studies

Feminist film theory

Production studies

New media

Journalism studies

Current projects:

Caught in the Web, a major feature documentary (with Alex Behse), funded by the New Zealand Film Commision and European broadcasters.

An online academic edited collection of essays relatiing to Caught in the Web: both film and book to be hosted on a Creative Commons website.

Goldson, A. V. (2014). Caught in the web: Issues from the Dotcom case 3. Paper presented at Political Journalism in the Asia-Pacific, Auckland University of Technology. 27 November - 29 November 2014. Related URL.